Deep brain stimulation didn’t work for a young OCD patient until new brain maps changed everything

“Five years ago, in a wheelchair, Julia Hum was admitted to a state mental hospital in Massachusetts.

After treatment with targeted deep brain stimulation, she hopes to walk out soon and, for the first time in her adult life, live independently, in her own apartment.

Hum, 24, has severe obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD, which once caused her to hurt herself and even affected her ability to eat and drink.

“My OCD kind of convinced me food and drinks were contaminated,” Hum said. Her thoughts told her things like that her food had parasites or harmful chemicals.”

Read the full article on CNN

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